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  • E-waste recycling in U.S. prisons

    Only 10 percent of the nearly 500 million obsolete computers in the U.S. are recycled, but where does even that 10 percent go? Many of them are shipped overseas to the developing world, but a large number are dismantled here in the U.S. by prisoners working in largely unregulated facilities.

    In mid-October, the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, along with prisoner-rights activists and environmental groups, released a report [PDF] detailing health and safety violations taking place at these facilities, "Toxic Sweatshops." The report includes statements culled from prisoners at 106 facilities run by Federal Prison Industries, which does business as UNICOR, and details their health problems associated with exposure to the thousands of chemicals in electronics.

    The use of cheap, under-regulated, captive labor and the environmental implications have made the report a topic of concern for health and environment activists, labor groups, prisoner-rights advocates, and businesses whose prices are being undercut by UNICOR. I had some time to catch up with Aditi Vaidya, program director at SVTC, on the results of the report, how citizens can be more active on this issue, and some of the other SVTC projects to look out for.

  • Sorry, GM

    And how did they do it? Producing high-quality cars with good gas mileage. Often the market rewards the right actors.

  • U.S. oil and gas leases screw taxpayers

    It looks like the oil and gas industries are getting what we pay for when it comes to drilling rights.

    The NYT reports today that it's finally gotten its hands on an Interior Department report which paints a pretty bleak picture of the benefits that come from our leasing deals (another blow to subsidies, eh Dr. Scorse?).

  • How the internet is changing news consumption habits

    I've made a living for two decades in the media business, and at times have subscribed to three newspapers, along with countless magazines. But now I'm wondering: Is it time to ditch the hard copy, save those trees, and avoid the weekly chore of recycling a bundle of papers?

    This obviously won't help the newspaper business, which is hemorrhaging subscribers, nor my friends who still work in the ink biz, but I'm realizing I no longer need paper. Newsprint's a dinosaur.

  • Cutting-edge nature writer discusses … nature

    Jenny PriceJenny Price is a nature writer, but unlike most of the species, she insists on writing about nature as it actually exists in our lives. If that means writing about plastic pink flamingos and concrete-bound rivers, well, that's the nature we see in the 21st century.

    Her recently published dissertation from Yale is the remarkably light and witty Flight Maps. On the site L.A. Observed, she has a popular guide to half-secret access routes to the beaches of Malibu. For The Believer, she recently wrote a spectacular essay on the Los Angeles River, and last month published a tribute to the late, great plastic flamingo for The New York Times ($) that concluded: "Rest in peace, my pink plastic friend. It was fun while it lasted."

    She is a Guggenheim fellow whose writing takes chances, and can open minds. For Grist, she graciously consented to an interview via email, which went back and forth for nearly two weeks. Take a look:

    Kit Stolz: Last month the Union Products factory that has been making the plastic pink flamingo for nearly fifty years shut down, and the inventor Don Featherstone said he thought his creation would soon become extinct. Can we use that word for something that was never alive in the first place?

    Jenny Price: Well, I think it's more accurate to say it's stopped reproducing.

  • Or, how to stick a lot of information in a very short post

    Following up on this airline news, Planet Ark reports:

    The European Union's executive arm approved plans on Wednesday to include aviation in its emissions trading system, giving international flights in and out of the EU a one-year reprieve before they have to join.

    Intra-EU flights will join the scheme, aimed at cutting global air pollution, in 2011. Flights into and out of the bloc will be included the following year, giving non-EU carriers time to prepare and see how the scheme works.

    More articles here and here and here. Airlines' "cautious welcome" here. Greens' skeptical reactions here and here and here.

  • A guest blogger weighs in on the impact of sports balls

    The following post is from guest sports blogger Scott James, founder of Fair Trade Sports.

    Here's a quick primer on sports balls, the materials of which they are made, and their environmental impact.

    Sports balls consist of three main components:

    • the outer shell (synthetic leather -- about 30 percent of the total ball);
    • the inner air bladder (rubber -- about 70 percent of the total ball); and
    • the dyes (less than 1 percent of the total ball).

  • Codes are springing up in cities big and small

    Just in the last month I've noticed signs of a major shift in green building practices around the country.

    Green building codes and ordinances are springing up all over the place. We may be seeing the beginning of one of the best environmental stories of 2007.

  • Sign up for Grist’s telephone survey

    Here it is, the chance you've been waiting for: Tell us what Grist means to you, and where you think we should go from here. Sign up to take part in a telephone survey.

    It's like writing a letter to Santa and telling him what you really want this year -- except on the phone, and you can rest assured that we won't give you any coal, no matter how bad you've been.

  • Just in case you need another reason to oppose ag subsidies

    They waste money, trash the environment, wreck trade relations, and oh, devastate small farmers.